Celebrated in a sentence as an adjective

The victory to be celebrated here is that the White House actually has to say something.

Steve Jobs, whoever, it might seem unfair that just because someone died that the "unworthy" things they did get celebrated.

It bothers me to see hyper homogenous work cultures celebrated as some kind of ideal [1].

Taking small steps toward that task is NOT "meaningless".The victory to be celebrated here is NOT that the problem has been solved.

"Pathogen, the first widely used, known, and celebrated path manager making plugin management possible, was released in 2008!

School sports, especially the big, spectator friendly, fast-twitch muscle oriented sports of football, basketball, and baseball, send a big message to the student body:Athletic achievement is something that should be celebrated by all students, to the degree that it should be celebrated by the peers of the students on the field/court.

Europeans have traditionally found this kind of pre-occupation with monetary success somewhat crass or trivial.> Europeans don’t realize that if a company that went from nothing to connecting 7 million homes is not celebrated...That's total BS. You dont need a culture of fanatical adoration of business success for their to be successful businesses.> if a company ... is not celebrated ... we will not get young Europeans on the right trackIt really worrisome how these people have to go around reminding everyone how amazing they are.

I am old enough to remember as a kid how people perceived automobiles in, say, the late 1950s, and there is no doubt from my personal recollection that average people rejoiced and celebrated ever-increasing uses of the high-speed automobile, cheered on the National Highway Act by which old two-lane state roads were sent into relative disuse through the creation of a vast network of interstate freeways, and, as a matter of culture, broadly celebrated what was called the "car culture.

Celebrated definitions

adjective

widely known and esteemed; "a famous actor"; "a celebrated musician"; "a famed scientist"; "an illustrious judge"; "a notable historian"; "a renowned painter"

See also: famed far-famed famous illustrious notable noted renowned

adjective

having an illustrious past

See also: historied storied